Abstract

Mutations of the p53 gene occur commonly in colorectal carcinomas and the wild-type p53 allele is often concomitantly deleted. These findings suggest that the wild-type gene may act as a suppressor of colorectal carcinoma cell growth. To test this hypothesis, wild-type or mutant human p53 genes were transfected into human colorectal carcinoma cell lines. Cells transfected with the wild-type gene formed colonies five- to tenfold less efficiently than those transfected with a mutant p53 gene. In those colonies that did form after wild-type gene transfection, the p53 sequences were found to be deleted or rearranged, or both, and no exogenous p53 messenger RNA expression was observed. In contrast, transfection with the wild-type gene had no apparent effect on the growth of epithelial cells derived from a benign colorectal tumor that had only wild-type p53 alleles. Immunocytochemical techniques demonstrated that carcinoma cells expressing the wild-type gene did not progress through the cell cycle, as evidenced by their failure to incorporate thymidine into DNA. These studies show that the wild-type gene can specifically suppress the growth of human colorectal carcinoma cells in vitro and that an in vivo-derived mutation resulting in a single conservative amino acid substitution in the p53 gene product abrogates this suppressive ability.

Keywords

TransfectionBiologyWild typeMutantGeneGene productMolecular biologyCancer researchTumor suppressor geneCell growthMutationCell cultureGene expressionGeneticsCarcinogenesis

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Publication Info

Year
1990
Type
article
Volume
249
Issue
4971
Pages
912-915
Citations
1784
Access
Closed

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Suzanne J. Baker, Sanford D. Markowitz, Eric R. Fearon et al. (1990). Suppression of Human Colorectal Carcinoma Cell Growth by Wild-Type p53. Science , 249 (4971) , 912-915. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.2144057

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DOI
10.1126/science.2144057